With barely a fit team to deploy, Hearts must take small consolation from the fact tomorrow’s trip to Kilmarnock means very little.

Injuries and suspensions leave manager Craig Levein with a threadbare squad made up of teenagers and a select few first-team players. Some of them are even carrying knocks.

Kyle Lafferty suffered a shoulder injury during the derby

Neither team can improve their league position in the season’s final game and European qualification is not possible. Just as well for Hearts. Levein admitted he has never experienced anything like the current crisis at Riccarton.

“Forty players [including youths] and I think we’ve got 12 outfield players who are fit to play. I’ve never seen anything like that in a million years. In all my time, I’ve never known anything like it,” he said.

“It would have been a disaster if we were going for Europe. I am going to ask the league if we can get back our development players to at least go on the bench. I have even looked at the younger ones in the under-17s, guys who have turned 16, like Sean Ward. He has done really well in our under-20s as an under-17, but he is on an academy contract. You can’t play unless you are on a professional contract. So I can’t do that.”

Malaury Martin’s wife is expecting a baby and he is therefore unavailable, while several youngsters are unavailable because they are on development loans to other clubs.

Mitchell and Lafferty could make it if pushed. Mitchell’s groin and Lafferty’s shoulder could possibly be nursed through against Kilmarnock but that won’t be clearer until tomorrow. Three of Levein’s fit players are goalkeepers – Jon McLaughlin, Jack Hamilton and Kelby Mason.

“I’ve got a good idea of who will be playing but I don’t know where,” explained the manager. “Demetri has had a groin strain since he came back and it’s got worse. I’m worried if I play him and he tears his groin that’s a disaster. He has just come back from an injury so that’s a huge concern for me. Danny Amankwaa has got Achilles problems. He has been carrying it, but he got a kick the other night and it’s worse. Souttar and Arnaud Djoum both have ruptured an Achilles just recently.

“I doubt we would have got a postponement because I think you have to have less than 11 players to get that.”

Levein is hopeful Lafferty will feature. Understandably, he is glad this campaign is just about finished. “Absolutely. Kyle fell on his shoulder the other night and he is quite sore this morning. He is desperate to play because he is going for 20 goals. He has a wee sling.”

Lafferty now has more goals in a season than any other Hearts striker since John Robertson scored 19 in 1997.

“Since Robbo, the highest goalscorer was Rudi Skacel on 18. So he has already surpassed that. It’s quite a significant achievement. To get to 20 is just a round number. Kyle understands round numbers a bit better,” joked Levein.

“If you get 20, it’s a significant thing. He has scored some brilliant goals this year, he really has. The one the other night was sensational. A different type of goal but it was sensational, the way he took it. And he is a big-game player. He scores in big games. I am just keeping my fingers crossed that there aren’t any suitors in the summer and he is still with us.

“There is some ligament damage to the shoulder and it is just whether he can play with the pain. That carrot of 20 goals is something that is in his head and he wants to achieve that. It will be his determination more than anything else. I don’t think he can make it worse. It will be whether he can handle the pain.”

The Northern Irishman was certainly not keen to be substituted after sustaining the injury against Hibs. “The adrenaline lasts for a while and even after the game it can last a couple of hours. It is only when you come in the next day, even the day after, that you feel the real effects of it.”

An injection to numb pain could be an option given the severe set of circumstances facing Hearts.

“I don’t know how localised the pain is. If it is ligaments then it will be large area, I imagine,” remarked Levein.

Naismith’s absence leaves Lafferty as the only experienced forward who may be available to face Kilmarnock. Hearts want the on-loan Norwich City player back at Tynecastle again next season so decided not to appeal his two-game ban for a tackle on the Celtic captain Scott Brown last weekend.

“I looked at it and said: ‘Well, if he’s going to come back here, I would rather get rid of the suspension.’ Looking at that, would it have made any difference?” said Levein.